Opinion
No. 32308
Decided May 2, 1951.
Workmen's compensation — Action to collect award against non complying employer — Record of commission's proceedings prima facie evidence — Section 1465-74, General Code — Presumption rebuttable — Jury question not presented, when — Employee not within scope of employment, when — Acts in violation of employer's express instructions — Deviation from course of employment.
1. Under the provisions of Section 1465-74, General Code, when an award of compensation has been made by the Industrial Commission against a noncomplying employer and an action has been instituted for the collection of such award, a certified copy of the record of the proceedings of the commission shall be attached to the petition and shall constitute prima facie evidence of the truth of the facts therein contained.
2. This presumption is rebuttable, and, when overcome by evidence from which reasonable minds can draw only one conclusion, the matter should not be submitted to a jury but a judgment should be rendered for the defendant.
3. An employee is not within the scope of his employment when, in violation of his express instructions to work as a clerk inside his employer's store, he secretly takes his employer's private automobile for the pretended purpose of making an incidental delivery to the home of a customer but in reality and mainly to accomplish an errand of his own during which he is involved in an accident more than a mile from the known and proper course of travel to the customer's home and without having made the delivery.
APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga county.
This action was instituted in the Court of Common Pleas by the Attorney General of Ohio under favor of Section 1465-74, General Code, to recover the amount of an award of compensation made by the Industrial Commission against the defendant, a so-called noncomplying employer.
The award was made to the widow of Edmund J. Ranallo who was killed in an automobile collision July 20, 1946, when he allegedly was in the employ of the defendant.
In the Court of Common Pleas the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the state of Ohio.
On an appeal to the Court of Appeals on questions of law, the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas was affirmed.
The case is in this court for a review by reason of the allowance of the defendant's motion to certify the record.
Mr. Herbert S. Duffy and Mr. C. William O'Neill, attorneys general, Mr. Samuel D. Katz, Mr. Chalmers P. Wylie and Mr. Brown W. Pettit, for appellee.
Mr. Gerald A. Doyle, for appellant.
The sole question requiring the attention of this court is whether the record discloses evidence from which reasonable minds might conclude that at the time of the collision and death of the decedent he was within the scope of employment by the defendant.
It is agreed that the young decedent had been employed as a truck driver to make deliveries for the defendant who operated a market on Fairmount Boulevard near Taylor road in the city of Cleveland Heights, Ohio.
To prove that the decedent was within the scope of that employment at the time of the collision, the state offered in evidence a certified copy of the proceedings of the Industrial Commission awarding compensation to the decedent's widow. Then the state rested.
This was in conformity with the provisions of Section 1465-74, General Code, which read in part as follows:
"In such action it shall be sufficient for plaintiff to set forth a copy of the record of proceedings of the commission relative to such claims as certified by the commission to the Attorney General and to state that there is due to plaintiff on account of such finding and award of the commission a specified sum which plaintiff claims with interest. A certified copy of such record of proceedings in such claim shall be attached to the petition and shall constitute prima facie evidence of the truth of the facts therein contained."
After the state rested the defendant offered his evidence in the form of testimony of himself and two other witnesses.
According to this evidence the defendant discovered that the decedent had been changing the amounts of some of the invoices by increasing the prices thereon and collecting the difference for himself. Furthermore, the decedent had been involved in several traffic accidents. A week before the fatal collision the defendant discussed these matters with the decedent and told him he was discharged as of the following Saturday which proved to be the day the decedent was killed. The reason for the week's notice was that the defendant thought the decedent still was a member of a labor union which required a notice of that length. The fact was that the decedent had been expelled for nonpayment of his union dues. When the defendant gave the decedent the notice of his dismissal he instructed the decedent not to drive the delivery truck any more but to confine himself to working in the store. The defendant then employed another to drive the truck and make the deliveries. However, on the last day of the decedent's employment there was a certain delivery to be made to the home of a family named Augustus living on Hobart road. The decedent learned this and told the new truck driver that he (the decedent) wanted to make the delivery because it would be in the neighborhood of a slaughterhouse where he had arranged to get some meat for his own use. Then without the knowledge of the defendant the decedent secretly took the defendant's private automobile and presumably started to make the delivery. He drove eastward on Chardon road. But instead of then turning north on Hobart road for more than a mile to the Augustus home, he continued on Chardon road toward the slaughterhouse. Approximately a mile and a quarter east of Hobart road he collided with another motor vehicle and was killed.
After the defendant had offered his evidence the state called two witnesses who contradicted the defendant's evidence in no important particular.
Under these circumstances does the record disclose evidence from which reasonable minds can draw different conclusions?
Under the provisions of Section 1465-74, General Code, supra, the certified copy of the record of the proceedings before the Industrial Commission constitutes prima facie evidence of the facts on which the state relies. Standing alone and unrebutted this certified copy would sustain a verdict and judgment in favor of the state. However, this presumption is rebuttable, and when overcome by evidence from which reasonable minds can draw only one conclusion, the matter should not be submitted to a jury but a judgment should be rendered for the defendant. Hamden Lodge v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co., 127 Ohio St. 469, 189 N.E. 246. The state introduced no evidence to controvert that of the defendant to the effect that at the time of the collision the decedent not only was not in the course of performing a duty delegated to him by his employer but was acting in direct violation of the positive instructions he had been given. In no sense can his gross misconduct be considered as merely a minor, incidental deviation or departure from the work his employer told him to perform in the store.
The defendant's motion for a directed verdict at the conclusion of all the evidence should have been granted. The judgment below must be reversed and a final judgment rendered for the defendant.
Judgment reversed.
ZIMMERMAN, STEWART, MIDDLETON, TAFT, MATTHIAS and HART, JJ., concur.